njhoudini
Well-known member
Happy belated birthday and annual trip around the sun!
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Happy Birthday from the FC stooges
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Thank you Eugene!Happy belated birthday and annual trip around the sun!
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Stewart, someday I hope to talk my son into a road trip to get together with the FC again.Happy Birthday from the FC stooges
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Duker, someone with both Woodworking and Metalworking shops would really class up the FC.Another Happy Birthday greeting from the wanna be FC .... Texas Stooge....
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Rian, it's never too late. You are back home and enjoying all the great memories this trip brought you.Bit late, but of course another birthday wish.
Trust it was as good as it could be.
Soon it will be Christmas too.
Bobby, some of my family members remind me each year. Fortunately no one offers a birthday cake to mark the occasion. Pretty sure 74 candles will set off the smoke alarms all over the house. Every day I wake up and celebrate the duffer snuffer's absence.Birthday???!!! You still have those. Andy you need to cast a candle snuffer; could call it a duffer snuffer! Happy you're still here Bob!
Guster, thanks for the birthday wishes. I probably have too many flap wheel disks, Roloc disks and abrasive rolls and cones. Seems like I buy a few, forget I have them then buy a few more.Belated happy birthday Bob. Most would agree you are off the hook opening up gifts you bought for yourself. Else I've been flaunting with the law for ages!
Nice job on the polishing. The 3M combination flap wheels work great getting the initial buff on the surface before polishing. The ones with the scouring pad material between the paper flaps. I will have to keep an eye out for those belts though after I source some flap discs. Got caught out using up my very last one today.
Though I have to agree with Riaan, header and other parts polishing is a path you don't come back from! I'm quite happy with the brushed look which hides a lot of sins.![]()
Kirk, you didn't miss it, you were just kind enough not to mention it. Thank you for that. The Sunday before my birthday, my son brought one of my granddaughters and one of my grandsons to the house for long overdue rides in the Corvette and Cadillac. This granddaughter is Car Crazy but not a very good driver. She has wrecked a Mustang, two 350 Zs and is now trying to be more mature in a Cadillac CTS coupe (with the little V6). I think an $1,100 a month insurance bill helped with the maturing. The grandson is going to be 15 in November so he won't be driving too soon. Drove the speed limit on the local roads with only one short 0 to 45 blast to demonstrate the cars' power. To them the top-down '87 Corvette seemed faster -- traction control makes the Cadillac seem calmer.I missed your b'day?I hope it was filled with family and joy.
Kirk, you're right. As they grow up and have busy lives of their own, it's harder and harder to get them all together but we try.Having family around to celebrate your birthday is always the best.
David, you are very kind and I'm honored to have you post on this thread. Don't feel guilty, everyone spends their time their own way. I enjoy playing with tools and trying to learn how to use them. Considering how much time I have to waste, I don't really get much done. Now Don Long, he really knows how to fill his days. Although he has more and better toys, I feel like we both are having the same kind of fun.Bob, I sure do enjoy your thread- A daily 'check' for me. I feel guilty seeing what you're up, all the time it seems. I don't get nearly that much done with all the free time I have these days. But, don't feel bad about the guilt trip you're spreading around- and I won't mention the birthday thing.
Thanks! David



Thanks baby brother! In percentage terms, you keep getting closer but I think you're right.Happy Birthday big brother!!
Looks like I'll never catch you...
Great job on the manifold. I have three to ship you.
I'm sure that was core box No. 5, in case there were some core failures they would know where to look.
Thanks Rian. As you have discovered first hand, Andy makes sense of just about everything.Looking good Bob.
Trust Andy to make sense of it.
Kirk, this is the second manifold I've polished but I don't plan to port-match this one. I probably should have paid the extra for the polished version.The intake looks pretty good.
Jim, the dumbest part of it is having to water the plants under the canopy. Because the rains stopped a week or two ago, the sprinklers will take care of it for now.Wow! Your new walkway looks pretty elegant. Does music play when you make the walk now?
Andy, please don't. She'll call it silly and three days later tell me she has this idea to extend the arbor from the two sections next to the garage to 27 sections down to the workshop.I'm telling Liane.
She can make things happen...
Thanks Warren!Nice body work.
Stewart, it was a balmy 89 (in the shade) today. Finished painting before my second shirt and glove overflowed with sweat. If you can figure a way to get the Mercedes down that 4-foot walkway, we can paint it here. I think with a couple of those end jacks we could do it. I mean what's the worst that could happen?Ah, so you’re an automotive painter. I hear Boca is nice this time of year.
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Thank you Steve!Bob you have done well with the bumper.![]()
Because they frown on temporary structures in Boca, I decided to put mine up in a less visible spot. I haven't broken it to my wife but I'm thinking I need a covered walkway from the garage to the workshop. It feels so peaceful and I don't have to worry about getting wet.
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Put a second hook in the fascia board to hang the reinforcement. I had to re-do the curve on both ends so it better matched the bumper cover that is sitting on the paint stand (this cheap Harbor Freight stand has held up well).
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It was pleasant in the shade but recalling my efforts putting the shelter up made me break out in a sweat. Well, as long as I have the remote tank hooked up to the garage compressor, might as well do a little work on the intake manifold. I love my pneumatic angle and die grinders.
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After a little finessing on the outside, I got out the tapered abrasive roll and gave the passages a little cleaning up around the injector end of the manifold.
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I have no idea why but there's a big 5 in the wall of the runner. When I have more time, I'm going to clean off the 5 and all the parting lines at the engine end of the manifold. I'll also spend time at the other end and then get to work on the upper half of the manifold. I'm focusing on the major curve where the upper and lower manifold join and the area around the injectors. The rough casting portions of the runners should be insignificant.
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I quit for the day at this point. It's close to final sanding time with finer and finer grits, followed by the buffing wheels and cones.
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Rod, good luck on the hunt for spray guns. I started with a Craftsman suction gun about 50 years ago. Bought a set of Devilbiss Finish Line gravity feed guns (full and detail size) and a cheap primer gun. On the advice of some professionals I bought the Iwata LPH400 for spraying clear and I have to say it's an amazing gun. The Sata was a used gun I bought for $100. The seller said it was in great shape. Apparently his idea of great shape was "shiny on the outside" because it was full of rock-hard epoxy primer.That's a timely post mr H. About to start looking at spray guns in the next week or so myself.
The bumper looks great.![]()
Jim, you've got that right. I used to tell people "You get used to the heat and humidity" but that was only true if you never turned on the A/C. Every year I get a little less "Used to it."Ahh...September. When the Florida temps drop from "surface of sun" down to "Sahara".
Thanks Andy. Equal parts failed attempts and luck leading up to this.
Bob, the Sata wasn't working perfectly but still good enough. I've had two of those stands for at least 10 years and I'm amazed how well they still work. The one I'm using spent a few years outside so it.s doubly surprising.The bumper is looking good so far Bob. Looks like you got nice smooth paint coverage. The prep time does make all the difference doesn't it!
I agree on that HF stand. I bought one recently on sale for $15 and it has worked out very good. Just enough higher than my workmate with cardboard on top to make the job easier.
Bob
Kirk, if I could get paid minimum wage for this work, I'd be rich (it takes me that long to get it done).The bumper looks really nice. Ready to start a bump and paint shop?
Craig, Liane forgot I bought the canopy and asked "How much?" When I said less than $100 she smiled and turned around to go back to her gardens. I think I have to stick to white and only add one canopy at a time.Happy Birthday Bob!
I'd just add another section or two of canopy, it fits right in, maybe some shades of green and blue and the wife won't notice.
I see your using those little tapered sanding things, funny, I just bought a bunch at a shop sale, look forward to using them.
Where do you like buying parts for the Sata gun?



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I plan to use two spray guns for this job. The Sata has a 1.3 tip and works well for spraying base coat. For silver it's important to use a decent gun that is less likely to make tiger stripes. The Iwata has a 1.4 tip and sprays clear coat really nice. If I'm lucky it won't need a lot of cutting and buffing.
<snip>
Bob - apologies for the thread hijack but ....Bob I travelled into the spraygun rabbit hole a bit last night and this morning. There is a lot there to peruse.
Yes the "starting line" kit offerings then the "LPH400" as you have came up but the end result is that a DeVilbiss GPi unit will be enroute to me hopefully when the sun shines in the UK in a few hours. Will have 1.4, 1.6 and 1.8 tips with it along with an adjustment regulator.
Seems to be a good all round unit for the stuff I'll be working on from what I can gather.
https://thegunman.net.au/devilbiss-gpi-review/
Cheers GB.

Ahh...September. When the Florida temps drop from "surface of sun" down to "Sahara".

Steve, I appreciate the compliment. The best tools can't hide incompetence but I'm trying to learn how to improve so it isn't obvious.Bob, great work on the Bumper, quality tools and good prep work always shine through.
I reckon two canopies would do it here, from back door to garage, you gotta love a covered walkway.
Wait, what ? 89 deg, we had frost on the windscreen this morning.
Steve![]()
John, it's 90 in the shade today but it is expected to drop down to 81 tonight. A week from Friday they are predicting 86/77 so we're getting out our winter bathing suits.89 !?! We had 61 today. Maybe I should rethink this Florida thing.
Rod, that's a good decision, I think the GPI is made in Great Britain and isn't readily available in the US. I have heard nothing but good comments on the GTI and it looks like the same gun. It's hard to beat $300 for a decent gun. I was hesitant to spend $400 on the Iwata gun but when I looked at the details, I understood why it isn't cheap to produce. The "Tulip" on the left is the Iwata nozzle that contributes to the gun's ability to spray a very wide pattern even when spraying only five or six inches from the surface. That's the Devilbiss Finish Line gun on the right.Bob I travelled into the spraygun rabbit hole a bit last night and this morning. There is a lot there to peruse.
Yes the "starting line" kit offerings then the "LPH400" as you have came up but the end result is that a DeVilbiss GPi unit will be enroute to me hopefully when the sun shines in the UK in a few hours. Will have 1.4, 1.6 and 1.8 tips with it along with an adjustment regulator.
Seems to be a good all round unit for the stuff I'll be working on from what I can gather.
https://thegunman.net.au/devilbiss-gpi-review/
Cheers GB.
Greg, I painted three cars (whole car) in the past; the first was acrylic enamel, the second lacquer and the third was a two-part something (expensive but terrible paint). I'm working my way up to painting two-part epoxy primer and two-part polyurethane finish coats. When I started my research, the price of the spray guns was a shock. Then I priced paint and the gun seemed cheaper. The biggest shock was the ancillary stuff like sandpaper. A box of fifteen 6-inch, 5000-grit 3M Trizact hook and loop disks goes on sale for just over $100. And getting a show-car finish requires boxes of the slightly cheaper and coarser sanding disks as well. Welcome to the automotive paint rabbit hole!Thanks Bob a timely post for me as I have a silver bumper to spray for my daughter's "new to her" car and I am a bit rusty and probably never was un-rusty as far as painting cars even though I did a few in acrylic in my younger days. It really does look great !
Bob - apologies for the thread hijack but ....
Rod- this gun looks pretty good but will end up a good few $$$ landed in Aus. I won't ask you to let me know how it goes as I am still waiting on your findings on the best dilution rate for Grime Reaper , you lazy ba$tard !! ( jokes) . FYI I tried 1:20 but it is pretty weak , I reckon 1:10 will be my general purpose/standard mix
Actually , I would love to hear how the gun goes...![]()
Hijack, what hijack?<hijack>
I've sent you a PM coolabah.
No I haven't had a chance to play with the detailing stuff yet.
</hijack>
Ric, thanks for spending your rare and precious time posting here. My daughter-in-law is the only one who even asks what I'd like for my birthday. I need to find a use for 18 bottles of Old Spice After Shave and 22 bars of soap on a rope.I always love catching up here, Bob. A belated Happy Birthday to you! So nice when a tool necessity falls near a gifting holiday! I've been on 6/12's for the last 5 weeks and I haven't spent much time on the forums, or anywhere else, but then there's so much more to read. You definitely have it covered there! Thanks for sharing.
Bobby, that's a great idea for the cool weather but this far south, I usually sleep through those four hours.I'm so used to humidity here in Charleston I save some sweat in a jar for cooler weather so my body can adapt to it slowly.
Great job on the manifold Bob. Hope you live to be 100! Keep plenty of oil on hand. Better get one of those railroad oil cans with the long spout!![]()